Set in 1999—a year that now feels like a quaint analog last stand before the digital deluge—the film follows Beverly Moody (a wonderfully earnest Gemma Brooke Allen), a shy, awkward orphan raised by her grandmother (Julie Bowen). After discovering a broken mixtape left by her late parents, Beverly embarks on a mission to decode its tracklist, believing the songs hold the key to understanding the family she never knew.

The true heart of the film, however, is the unlikely trio of misfits Beverly assembles: the punk-rocker neighbor (Nick Thune, surprisingly tender), the shy boy with a bootleg CD burner, and the school’s “weird” girl. Their chemistry feels authentically pre-teen—clumsy, loyal, and fueled by snacks and shared secrets.

Here’s a review of Mixtape (the 2021 coming-of-age film directed by Valerie Weiss), written in the style of a critic’s take.

A warm hug that smells like old plastic and teen spirit.

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